sustainable contingency base camp operations and ... · project number 5e. task number 5f. work...
TRANSCRIPT
US Army Corps of EngineersBUILDING STRONG®
Sustainable Contingency Base Camp Operations and Management: Observations in Afghanistan 2011Garth Anderson, P.E.Construction Engineering Research Laboratory
E2S2 ConferenceNew Orleans, LA11 May 2011
Report Documentation Page Form ApprovedOMB No. 0704-0188
Public reporting burden for the collection of information is estimated to average 1 hour per response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing data sources, gathering andmaintaining the data needed, and completing and reviewing the collection of information. Send comments regarding this burden estimate or any other aspect of this collection of information,including suggestions for reducing this burden, to Washington Headquarters Services, Directorate for Information Operations and Reports, 1215 Jefferson Davis Highway, Suite 1204, ArlingtonVA 22202-4302. Respondents should be aware that notwithstanding any other provision of law, no person shall be subject to a penalty for failing to comply with a collection of information if itdoes not display a currently valid OMB control number.
1. REPORT DATE 11 MAY 2011 2. REPORT TYPE
3. DATES COVERED 00-00-2011 to 00-00-2011
4. TITLE AND SUBTITLE Sustainable Contingency Base Camp Operations and Management:Observations in Afghanistan 2011
5a. CONTRACT NUMBER
5b. GRANT NUMBER
5c. PROGRAM ELEMENT NUMBER
6. AUTHOR(S) 5d. PROJECT NUMBER
5e. TASK NUMBER
5f. WORK UNIT NUMBER
7. PERFORMING ORGANIZATION NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) Army Engineer Research and Development Center,ConstructionEngineering Research Laboratory,PO Box 9005,Champaign,IL,61826-9005
8. PERFORMING ORGANIZATIONREPORT NUMBER
9. SPONSORING/MONITORING AGENCY NAME(S) AND ADDRESS(ES) 10. SPONSOR/MONITOR’S ACRONYM(S)
11. SPONSOR/MONITOR’S REPORT NUMBER(S)
12. DISTRIBUTION/AVAILABILITY STATEMENT Approved for public release; distribution unlimited
13. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES Presented at the NDIA Environment, Energy Security & Sustainability (E2S2) Symposium & Exhibitionheld 9-12 May 2011 in New Orleans, LA.
14. ABSTRACT
15. SUBJECT TERMS
16. SECURITY CLASSIFICATION OF: 17. LIMITATION OF ABSTRACT Same as
Report (SAR)
18. NUMBEROF PAGES
49
19a. NAME OFRESPONSIBLE PERSON
a. REPORT unclassified
b. ABSTRACT unclassified
c. THIS PAGE unclassified
Standard Form 298 (Rev. 8-98) Prescribed by ANSI Std Z39-18
BUILDING STRONG®
OUTLINE
DEFINITION BASE CAMP DEFINITION & FUNCTIONS STAFFING – Examples in practice TRAINING POLICIES AND PRACTICES RECOMMENDATIONS
BUILDING STRONG®
BASE CAMP DEFINITION“A base camp is an evolving military facility that supports the military operations of a deployed unit and provides the necessary support and services for sustained operations. Base camps consist of intermediate staging bases and forward operations bases and support the tenants and equipment. While base camps are not permanent bases or installations, they develop many of the same functions and facilities the longer they exist. A base or base camp can contain one or more units from one or more Services. It has a defined perimeter and established access controls and takes advantage of natural and man-made features.”
TRADOC Base Camp Functional Area Analysis
BUILDING STRONG®
That which we call a BASE CAMPby any other name would smell as bad.
4
NON-TRADITIONAL INSTALLATION
COS
THEATER ENCAMPMENT
AIRFIELD
CMBJFOB
FOB
COP
MOB
JCOB COL
CSL
BUILDING STRONG®
BASE CAMP CORE FUNCTIONS
Command & control Life support Force protection Power projection Fires support Communications support
RSOI support Maintenance & logistics
support Transportation support Training support MWR Emergency Services
BUILDING STRONG®
WHY SUSTAINABLE BASE CAMPS?
Reduce resource consumption► Fewer vehicles and soldiers on the road► Lower cost► Reduce basecamp footprint► More resources = larger logistics tail that also
must be supported► More supportable in austere locations
Human health & environment► Enhance soldier quality of life► Less impact on local economy and culture► The right thing to do!
BUILDING STRONG®
ACHIEVING SUSTAINABILITY Staffing and Management
► Base camp staff manning and organization► Training
Methods and Standards► Doctrine, policies and practices► Master planning► Construction techniques and standards► Quality of life standards
Technology► Efficient power generation, distribution, usage► Water reuse
BUILDING STRONG®
BASE CAMP STAFFING AND TRAINING
BUILDING STRONG®
MANEUVER ENHANCEMENT BRIGADE – Good!
TF Rushmore (196th
MEB) managed Kabul Base Cluster (7 camps)
Large, multi-functional staff
Separate LTC-led mayor cell for each larger camp
Robust DPW supported entire KBC
9
BUILDING STRONG®
MANEUVER ENHANCEMENT BRIGADE
10
BUILDING STRONG®
REGIONAL SUPPORT GROUPGood!
645th RSG staffed US portion of Kandahar AF
Colonel-led, provided appropriate rank to work with NATO staff
Augmented DPW staff – good skill set
Attached contracting cell
11
BUILDING STRONG®
RSG STRUCTURE (Draft, Proposed)
Command Group (4)
S2 (6) S3 (19) S4 (18)
CJA (3) PAO (2) HHC (9)Unit Ministry Team (2)
RSG 51632G00
(84)
S6 (8)S1 (13)
BUILDING STRONG®
BRIGADE COMBAT TEAMGood effort, Wrong unit
TF Archer (38th IBCT) managed Bagram AF, population > 30,000. Did an excellent job playing the hand dealt.
TF also responsible for ISAF missions BDE SPT BN CDR dual-hatted. Most time spent
on mayor responsibilities, little time to oversee ISAF mission support companies
Augmented DPW, civilian master planner Large enduring base needs dedicated base
camp manning13
BUILDING STRONG®14
Commander: LTC John Perkins CSM: CSM Willie Adams TF Archer
I I
~ Organic ADCON Attached Attached/DS to BDE
.-----------'-~---. _l____ I I I . I .1~1 •• I I •• I
~~~:~~~ip I ~~~ I QJ QJ QJ I ~~~ II ~s~~ II s:rs II ss~s I
Functional Relationship
B 8 8 8 B
Billeting GB BEJ
I Bazaar I
G Trans/ Maint
Supply
& Svcs
Fencing I Asphalt
BUILDING STRONG®
SMALL BASE CAMP STAFFING FOB Lindsay, population =
1,200, staffed by HQ Troop of Cavalry Squadron
Mayor staff = 2 X CPT, 1 X MSG, 1 X SFC, 2 X SGT. Excellent leadership!
AF EPBS master planner LOGCAP element on base for
water, power, DFAC, facility maint. AMC from KAF provided oversight.
Other support from nearby Kandahar AF
15
BUILDING STRONG®
TRAINING (or lack thereof) Pre-deployment training
► Few units received formal training on base camp and DPW operations
► No training packages or venues available for training► If unit designated mid-tour to manage base camp, no
resources available for OJT: SME contacts, standard processes, etc
Contracting► Individuals received some COR training but may not
have had expertise to oversee contracts► 8 hours on line does not a COR make!
BUILDING STRONG®
TRAINING: Getting better
75th Battle Command Training DIV making effort to integrate base camp operations into pre-deployment command post exercises
RSGs developing training to support METL of base camp management
Unit initiative to seek non-conventional training sources► Contacting installation DPWs and Garrison
Commands to learn processes► Seeking SMEs for pre-deployment training
17
BUILDING STRONG®
METHODS: PLANNING, DOCTRINE AND
STANDARDS
BUILDING STRONG®
MASTER PLANNING: GOOD!BIG Improvement in Master Planning
► Air Force Expeditionary PRIME BEEF Squadrons producing “Ultra-Light” master plans
► Contains only information critical to commander and mayor staff
► Updated regularly – no more 200 page masterpieces collecting dust!
BUILDING STRONG®20
8051: Develop consensus amoog base occupants on requirements and development needs, prewide d~elopment requirements to 777. • 777: Obtain JFUB approval and plan and dMign projects. Provide construction management for RCC-bu1it projKU. • 3-NCR: Determine project uecutlon priorities 01nd methods (troop labor versus RCC) • USfOR-A: Receive and validate l OJs, coordinate enduring needs a t base. • Redhorse/ th En/NMCS : Troop labor fOf project construction. • RC- :Oversee selection of contractors to complete RCCprojKts.
Minimum Military Requirements • lnfnutructure/facililie$ will typiallly be austere, functional, and practic~l, and simple, solid, and safe; the most basic solution that fully meets the need over the
anticipated Pfflod of use. • Intended to milke most f'ffident USI!' of limited resources- ti~. monf'y, pi!'Oplt', miltffial - whilf' ml"f'ting mission objectivn. • [stabltshed by US and NATO orders: FRAGO , OPLAN , NATO /SHI.IX/
• ~u~~~~~~"ft~~~~~}S)~~~~~~i~:::~~~~=~eJ/6~~:!~~~~:~~~~t:f~'~~~~b~~~~~~es;(3)01bi1ity to ~e an exiulns versus 01 new uset;(4)misslon
IC- Span, CMU, Pre-EnSineered Building. SEAhut, Bhut, etc.
What wtll i~st to tnmSltion phne of OPLAN )? -- First Chotce IS Alu ka Tents or Eqyivalent Tent System If Al;uka Tf'nts will not s~e purposf', what is thl!' next least costly method of construction? S£Ahut, Bhut, e tc. An economic analysis should be part of the JFUB/JARB pa<ket justifying.
Department of the Air Force Expeditionary Prime BEEF Group 30 December 2010
Province, Afghanistan
Region: RCOctober 20 PAX: Ulnd Boundary Area: 7. a
,. Perimeter: Majority HE 0 sonry wall LUA Status: approved, ex ansion pending Prevailing Wind: NW LOGCAP Band: 4 Mine Clearance: All areas within perimeter cleared
History • Originally developed to support
• In la t e , the base was expanded under as BOS·I to its current boundaries, to accommodate an anticipated troop level Increase when
assumed BOS-IIn e arly 20 • and began programming a variety of improvements
• BOS·I transferred to 1n the summer of 20 , and efforts began to organize and consolidat e the projects Initiated by
• A second expansion of the FOB is expected to be approved In earty 20 . Master planning e fforts for this area are just s tarting to commence
Current Status • U.S. upgrading fadlities to support pax Increase up to and to
accommodate mission emphasis on battlefield support • A portion of the south cent ral part o f the base supports enduring
efforts with xx personnel
Mission • Serves as hub for U.S. forces supporting a nd con\loylng to adjacent
COP's • Setves as support for
Princip_!l l Te~ants
Current PAX
Uni t 0/H 15 Jan :
BUILDING STRONG®
roposed Master Plan
__ , --1 -
II
II
II
Development Constraints and Initiatives • Accommodate pax increase up to troops
within limited FOB area constrained by adjacent residential development
• Support FOB mission focus on battlefield support, including distribution of materiel and equipment for troops deploying to adjacent COP' sf checkpoints
• Consolidate compatible land uses in appropriate locations
• Integrate proposed expansion to maximize FOB capacity and functionality
• Enhance AT/FP elements to accommodate proposed FOB expansion, given the proximity to
Site Imagery I December
I.SA 1, sst of Bear DFAC fooldnc north
SOilth of new DFAC conslrllction site loofd,. north
liUe/EPN Description Stallls
A.;quisfboft and cons1NGtion
~::~=1~:!ar.c lBO A.,ilt.in&Jf\.18
~~~X:~~f:an I Ill A""'fniJl\.18 antlap:rT<d ""'"'lOin pall
COnstruction of 3 (!/U lSS \lndetO:lnS:I\IC.· iJCilr.ieJtOSUpt!Of11M!W RCC tlon 1llltq (l)O'I)OIJM!
~-~ f iOOIO.S.,.
,.,..,,,.,.""", DHit•RMf~ lBO
'"""'""'""'' lBO 1100111Hofn
Undt!f CoMmie:. tlao
Undi!'I'CanS:nK· tlon
OMic•""""
AwliTinaJfUI
Ad111JU1
l)Jirsipo<d, lW"arnni i CI'IOnin
''""' OHStll){oM/ O..CnRMw
UftderC«u:nx· tlon
OtlianRMw
OIISIINSf
..... -. ... _ .....
BUILDING STRONG®
MASTER PLANNING SUCCESS:Camp Leatherneck
Started from scratch – not a captured facility Planned as an enduring facility from the
beginning► No space restrictions► Permanent facilities from the start► Basic infrastructure in place before buildings► Wide utility corridors planned along roads
Solid waste incinerator nearing completion Graywater separation
22
BUILDING STRONG®
MASTER PLANNING SUCCESS:Camp Leatherneck
23
BUILDING STRONG®
CONTINUITY OF OPERATIONS
• Base camp units rotate in total every 9-12 months with 1 week between incoming and outgoing
• Large loss of continuity in process, contract oversight, policy, requirements
Some units trying staggered rotations to increase overlap and situational awareness
BUILDING STRONG®
LOCAL CONSTRUCTION STANDARDSA Smart Approach
FOB Salerno constructing standard buildings using local materials, labor and techniques
Multiple uses –offices, billets, clinics
25
BUILDING STRONG®
CONSTRUCTION FEATURES
Standard building footprint and exterior envelope Interiors can be adapted for any purpose with non-
load bearing walls or partitions Thick walls increase R-value and force protection Electrical wiring uses surface mounted conduit
► Facilitates quality assurance inspection► Can be easily retrofitted to local standards after base
turnover Simple “Chigo” split HVAC units, locally purchased
BUILDING STRONG®
LOCAL MATERIALS AND CONSTRUCTION TECHNIQUES
Easier to go “Afghan First” Reduces transportation costs
► Bricks & tiles produced nearby► Concrete placed on site
Larger construction labor pool – no need for skills in US construction techniques
Materials are more appropriate for climate Structures are culturally suitable for turnover of base
BUILDING STRONG®
Finished structures
BUILDING STRONG®
Concrete column prep
Installing roof beams
BUILDING STRONG®
Interior view Roof/ceiling construction
Steel tile channelsCeiling tiles
BUILDING STRONG®
Exterior masonry
BUILDING STRONG®
Concrete roof slab prep Ceiling/roofing tiles
BUILDING STRONG®
Interior finishes
Interior electrical
BUILDING STRONG®
CONSTRUCTION PRACTICES:Good
Innovative techniques► Reuse of shipping
containers► K-Span► Frame Master
34
BUILDING STRONG®
CONSTRUCTION PRACTICES:Needs improvement
MILCON process and timeline do not overlay well in a contingency environment► 2-4 years from requirement definition to
groundbreaking► Several rotations of base camp staffs may not have
awareness of project in pipeline► MILCON timelines lag far behind bona-fide
requirement changes Not enough standardization of facilities - tenant
units want “custom” buildings
35
BUILDING STRONG®
CONSTRUCTION PRACTICES:Needs Improvement
We continue to apply US standards even for Afghan occupied facilities► Makes finding licensed contractors difficult► Locals cannot maintain US spec equipment
From scope of work for Afghan Uniformed Police Station:► Specs in English units► Electrical specs are NEC 2008 and US 120V/60 hz► Fire code is NFPA 2009, including smoke detectors
36
BUILDING STRONG®
WATER DEMAND: The Smart
Graywater capture at some bases
Reuse for construction and dust control
Reduces water demand
Reduces load on WWTP
37
BUILDING STRONG®
WATER DEMAND: Needs Improvement
Mandatory use of ROWPU when standard water treatment works
ROWPU► Expensive► Costly to operate► Increases water
demand by 20-30%
38
BUILDING STRONG®
WATER DEMAND: Needs Improvement
Bottled water remains the primary source of drinking water
Larger bases capable of producing bulk potable water
Must overcome bias toward the bottle
39
BUILDING STRONG®
WASTE WATER: The Good
Package plants are effective in areas with limited space
Standard treatment train: aeration-clarifier-sludge digester-chlorination
Each unit processes up to 30Kgal/day
40
BUILDING STRONG®
WASTE WATER: Needs Improvement
Many septic fields are ineffective due to limited space and low soil percolation
Lagoons are typically undersized
Several bases pump blackwater into trucks for off-base disposal
41
BUILDING STRONG®
SOLID WASTE: The Good
Most bases made effort to recycle
Burn pits were adequately managed at larger bases
Waste streams segregated
Incinerators coming on line
42
BUILDING STRONG®
SOLID WASTE: The Good
43
..
. AU MILITARY
LITHIUM BATTERIES MUST BE DISPOSED
AT UNIT LEVEL
·~ATTENTION ~-· rlKAliNE BAnERIES
ONlY! ,fiiJI;
'V
All OTHER BAnERIES NEED TO BE DEliVERED
TO HIZMIT YARD
BUILDING STRONG®
SOLID WASTE: Needs Improvement
Urban base camps had few alternatives to haul and dump
Recycling of plastic not cost effective at smaller bases – no market near
44
BUILDING STRONG®
NON-TACTICAL (ADMIN) VEHICLESWhere did they all come from?
Use of SUVs, ATVs on base is out of control –regular traffic jams
Majority of trips were for convenience
US population at KAF► People 20,000► Admin vehicles 6,000
Bagram did have bus service
45
BUILDING STRONG®
RECOMMENDATIONS Large, enduring bases should have
permanent base camp staff. IMCOM led? Continue to staff large expeditionary bases
with either an MEB or RSG Develop pre-deployment training packages
► Exercise mayor staff during command post exercises
► DPW course for contingency camps – not the same as CONUS DPW
► Contingency contracting training, also include technical training for specific contract
BUILDING STRONG®
RECOMMENDATIONS Use appropriate water treatment methods based
on mission and conditions at specific base camp Reserve bottled water for only mission personnel
at bases that produce bulk potable water Apply graywater separation and reuse systems
at more bases. If space and soil conditions limit the use of
lagoons and septic fields, plan to use WW package plants
Look at Net Zero Water concepts.
BUILDING STRONG®
RECOMMENDATIONS
Units should consider a staggered Transfer of Authority.
Continue the use of the new “ultra-light” master plan in theater
Mandate the use of local construction techniques and materials where feasible.
Limit using US specs for Afghan owned/operated facilities
Limit the use of administrative vehicles
48